And suburban poverty is going to get worse: the suburban poor land at the intersection of economic transformations, cultural shifts, infrastructure decline, suburban bankruptcy and climate vulnerability. In fact, if you were designing the worst place to be poor in decades ahead, you'd come up with a low-density, auto-dependent, aging and declining suburb.

Suburban poverty can't be tackled without major interventions in planning, built form, infrastructure, governance; without, in essence, unmaking broken suburbs and re-crafting them into something new. The problems of the new suburban poor are structural.

And one of the worst consequences of urban NIMBYism which limits/blocks new housing development is that it's driving the urban poor out into these suburbs.